A nine-minute look at campus
Before reading further, it's worth seeing the place. This is the college's official student-led virtual tour, which walks through the main spaces on campus in under nine minutes.
Source: Williams College official YouTube channel.
The curriculum and how it's taught
Williams is undergraduate-focused. All classes are taught by professors rather than teaching assistants, and the student–faculty ratio is 7:1, among the lowest of any college. The college lists more than 700 courses annually across roughly 36 majors and a set of concentrations (its term for minors).
The calendar is unusual. Williams runs a 4-1-4 schedule: a fall semester, a three-week January term called Winter Study in which you take a single subject (often pass/fail, sometimes a trip, internship, or independent project), and a spring semester.
What to look at
- Whether the majors you're considering are actually offered, and how large their introductory classes are.
- The distribution requirements — Williams asks students to take courses across three divisions plus other requirements.
- Research opportunities: the college reports that roughly 40% of students do funded research at some point.
- Academics at WilliamsOfficial overview
- Course CatalogMajors, courses, requirements
- Winter StudyThe January term
The Oxford-style tutorial system
This is the thing most often cited as distinctive about Williams, and it's worth understanding concretely. In a tutorial, a small number of students — frequently just two — meet weekly with a single professor. Each week, students alternate: one presents independent work (an essay, a problem set, a lab report, an art critique) while the other responds to it, then they switch.
Williams introduced the format in 1988, modeled on Oxford's. The college offers 65 or more tutorials each year across the curriculum, and a large share of students take at least one before graduating. If close, discussion-heavy, writing-intensive work appeals to you, this is a feature to weigh heavily.
Related: a year at Oxford
Juniors can apply to the Williams-Exeter Programme at Oxford, spending a full year studying under the actual Oxford tutorial system at Exeter College. It's selective and requires a 3.5 GPA to apply, but it's a direct extension of what the on-campus tutorials are modeled on.
- Tutorials overviewHow the format works
- Williams-Exeter at OxfordThe junior-year program
What it costs, and what it might actually cost you
The published price ("sticker price") and the price a given family pays are usually very different. Williams meets 100% of demonstrated financial need, and has moved to an "all-grant" aid model, meaning need-based aid is awarded as grants rather than loans. Williams also practices need-blind admission for domestic applicants.
Two things to do, in order: run the Net Price Calculator with your family's actual numbers, then compare that estimate against other schools on your list. The sticker price tells you very little on its own.
- Admission & Financial AidOfficial hub
- Net Price CalculatorEstimate your real cost
Where you'll live, and what there is to do
Williams is residential — nearly all students live on campus all four years, in a house/residential system rather than fraternities, which the college phased out decades ago. The setting is rural: Williamstown sits in the Berkshire mountains, which shapes daily life as much as anything academic.
Athletics and the outdoors
Williams competes in NCAA Division III in the NESCAC conference, with 32 varsity teams plus extensive club and intramural sports. A large share of students play at some level. The Williams Outing Club is one of the most active student organizations, running trips into the surrounding mountains and forests.
Arts and museums
The college is connected to notable art institutions including the Clark Art Institute and MASS MoCA nearby — unusual resources for a school this size, and worth a look if the arts matter to you.
- Student LifeHousing, clubs, dining
- Williams Athletics (Ephs)Varsity and club sports
- Williams Outing ClubThe outdoors program
Visiting, virtually or in person
A campus visit is the single best way to judge fit, and Williams runs regular tours and hour-long information sessions with an admission officer and a current student. If you can't get to the Berkshires, the official channels below let you see a lot from a distance.
One program worth knowing about: Windows on Williams (WOW) is a free three-day fly-in for rising seniors. Williams covers transportation, meals, and overnight housing in a dorm, and you attend classes and meet faculty. If you're eligible, it's the most thorough way to experience the place at no cost.
A walk through campus
"Intro to Williams College" — Williams College official YouTube channel.
- Visit & ConnectTours and info sessions
- Welcome to WilliamsFor admitted & prospective students
- Official YouTube channelMore video
What the application looks like
Williams is highly selective: it admitted about 8.5% of applicants to the Class of 2029. It accepts the Common Application, the Coalition Application, and QuestBridge. The college is currently test-optional, so you decide whether to submit SAT or ACT scores.
A practical note: Williams does not consider "demonstrated interest," so visiting or emailing won't change your odds. Focus your energy on the application itself. Decide early between Early Decision (binding) and Regular Decision, and confirm current deadlines on the official page — they change year to year.
Before you apply, ask yourself
Does the tutorial system genuinely appeal to you? Are you comfortable in a small, rural, residential community? Did the Net Price Calculator produce a number that works? Those three questions matter more than the prestige.
- Admission & Financial AidDeadlines & requirements
- Office of AdmissionApply & connect